Name: | Description: | Size: | Format: | |
---|---|---|---|---|
249.39 KB | Adobe PDF |
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The link between empathy and psychopathy phenotypes (grandiose-manipulative, callous-unemotional and impulsive-irresponsible) as well as its underlying mechanisms, are far from being consensual, especially in developmental samples. To explore the differential associations between psychopathy phenotypes, empathy domains (cognitive and affective), and interoception in a community sample of adolescents. 64 adolescents (14.95 years; 42.2% males) completed an online survey that assessed psychopathy phenotypes (Youth Psychopathic Traits Inventory), cognitive and affective empathy (Basic Empathy Scale), and interoceptive accuracy (Interoceptive Accuracy Scale) as well as alexithymia for control purposes (Toronto Alexithymia Scale). Zero-order correlations, t-tests, and hierarchical linear regressions were employed for statistical analysis. Callous-unemotional traits were negatively correlated with both empathy domains, while impulsive-irresponsible traits were only negatively correlated to cognitive empathy, despite these associations being marginally significant in multivariate analysis. Grandiose-manipulative traits were not related to either empathy domain. There were no associations between interoceptive accuracy and psychopathy phenotypes after controlling for age, sex, and alexithymia. Empathy domains seem to be differentially related to psychopathy phenotypes in adolescents. The contributing role of interoception in this association should be further explored using larger sample sizes and alternative measures.
Description
Keywords
Adolescents Callous-unemotional Development Empathy Grandiose-manipulative Impulsive-irresponsible Interoception Interoceptive accuracy Personality Poster Psychopathy
Citation
Marinho, E., Alves, I., Pereira, M. R., Barbosa, N. B., Barbosa, F., & Campos, C. (2022, abril 1). The psychopathic heart: Empathy, interoception, and psychopathy traits in adolescents. SAS 2022 Annual Conference. https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/2DT96
Publisher
Society for Affective Science